p. 95
| “animal food at their tables”: Blake, Water for the Cities , 9.
|
p. 95
| fresh from designing the water system: This story is recounted in Morris, The Blue Death , 137–138.
|
p. 95
| reversed the flow: Robert Glennon, Unquenchable: America’s Water Crisis and What to Do About It (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2009), 209.
|
p. 96
| too many potential intervening factors: Missouri v. Illinois, 200 U.S. 496 (1906).
|
p. 96
| jewels in England’s colonial crown: This story is recounted in Gleick, The World’s Water , 129.
|
p. 97
| fever still claimed thousands: Chapelle, Wellsprings , 181.
|
p. 98
| Sanskrit writings from approximately 2000 BC: Kathy Jes-person, “Search for Clean Water Continues,” On Tap , Summer 1996, 6, http://www.nesc.wvu.edu/ndwc/pdf/OT/OTs96.pdf .
|
p. 98
| the range of treatment technologies: Ibid.
|
p. 98
| the common practice was light boiling: Cast, “Women Drinking in Early Modern England,” 2.
|
p. 98
| purifying water by passing it: “History of Drinking Water Systems,” Department of Engineering, Mercer University (2005), http://egrweb.mercer.edu/eve406/eve406rom/documents/History-Water.pdf ; Baker, The Quest for Pure Water , 19, 118.
|
p. 98
| first municipal plant was not built: “History of Drinking Water Systems,” 2.
|
p. 99
| tombs of the Egyptian pharaohs: M. N. Baker, The Quest for Pure Water (Denver: American Waste Water Association, 1948), 2.
|
p. 100
| “water did not cause typhoid”: Joel A. Tarr & T. F. Josie, “Critical Decisions in Pittsburgh Water and Wastewater Treatment,” in A History of Water: The World of Water , eds. Terje Tvedt and Terje Oestigaard (London: I. B. Tauris, 2006), 206.
|
p. 100
| adoption of chlorinated water: Patrick Gurian and Joel A. Tarr, “The First Federal Drinking Water Quality Standards and Their Evolution: A History from 1914 to 1974,” in Improving Regulation: Cases in Environment, Health, and Safety , eds. Paul S. Fischbeck and R. Scott Farrow (Washington, DC: Resources for the Future, 2001), 43, 53.
|
p. 100
| more than five thousand water treatment systems: Chapelle, Wellsprings , 15.
|
p. 100
| the bottled water sector collapsed: Ibid.
|
p. 101
| any other technological advance: Ibid.
|
p. 101
| “horses and other animals refuse”: Joseph Race, Chlorination of Water (1918), 63.
|
p. 101
| “delivered to Jersey City pure”: The Mayor and Aldermen of Jersey City v. Jersey City Water Supply Company 79 N.J. Ct of Chancery Reports 212, 214 (July 11, 1911). See also Race, Chlorination of Water , 12.
|
p. 101
| “as pure as mountain spring water” Morris, The Blue Death , 161.
|
p. 102
| fortified cities fell: Raymond P. Dougherty, “Sennacherib and the Walled Cities of Judah,” Journal of Biblical Literature 49, no. 2 (1930), 160, 162-63.
|
p. 102
| “Millo in the city of David”: 2 Chronicles 32:5.
|
p. 103
| the dark, winding 533-meter path: Amos Frumkin and Aryeh Shimron, “Tunnel Engineering in the Iron Age: Geoarchaeology of the Siloam Tunnel, Jerusalem,” Journal of Archaeological Science 33 (2006), 227–28.
|
p. 103
| “I imposed my yoke”: Dougherty, “Sennacherib and the Walled Cities of Judah,” 162.
|
p. 104
| leasing official mugs: London: The Greatest City ; “The Great Conduit,” Florilegium Urbanum, http://www.trytel.com/~tristan/towns/florilegium/community/cmfabr24.html ; Roger D. Hansen, “Water-Related Infrastructure in Medieval London,” WaterHistory.org , http://www.waterhistory.org/histories/london/london.pdf .
|
p. 104
| contracted with their local monasteries: “The Great Conduit.”
|
p. 104
| “a glass of water fit to drink”: As quoted in Peter Gleick, Bottled and Sold (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2010), 4.
|
p. 104
| a philanthropic society: Howard Malchow, “Free Water: The Public Drinking Fountain Movement and Victorian London,” London Journal 4 (1978), 181, 184–188.
|
p. 105
| a venture dedicated to the common good: “The Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association,” DrinkingFountains.org , http://www.drinkingfountains.org/Attachments%28PDF%29/DFA%20HIstory.pdf .
|
p. 106
| commemoration of the drinking fountain: Lithograph from Illustrated London News , Apr. 30, 1859.
|
p. 107
| the grandeur of the civic edifice: The photograph can be found at Wikimedia, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Worcester_Cross_drinking_fountain,_Kidderminster_-_DSCF0918.jpg .
|
p. 108
| about one pipe break a day: Charles Duhigg, “Saving U.S. Water and Sewer Systems Would Be Costly,” New York Times , Mar. 14, 2010.
|
p. 109
| thirty-six million gallons per day: Ken Belson, “Plumber’s Job on a Giant’s Scale: Fixing New York’s Drinking Straw,” New York Times , Nov. 22, 2008, http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/23/nyregion/23tunnel.html .
|
p. 109
| the lead soldering used to join: “What’s on Tap,” National Resources Defense Council, June 2003, http://www.nrdc.org//water/drinking/uscities/contents.asp .
|
p. 109
| breaks in water and sewer lines: Glennon, Unquenchable , 211.
|
p. 109
| we need $335 billion: Duhigg, “Saving U.S. Water and Sewer Systems,” New York Times , Mar. 14, 2010.
|
p. 110
| waterborne parasites, viruses: Ibid.
|
p. 110
| about nine hundred deaths: Glennon, Unquenchable , 66.
|
p. 110
| This history is based on the research of the architectural historian, Giorgio Gionighian. Giorgio Gionighian, Building a Renaissance Double House in Venice , 8 ARQ 299 (nos. 3/4, 2004). See also Giorigio Gianighian, L’Acqua di Venezia: Dal medioevo all’acquedotto e oltre , Ananke 134 (2010).
|
p. 112
| Illustrazioni di G. Del Pedros © tratte da Venezia come di G. Gianighian e P. Pavanini, Ambier & Keller editors, Venezia 2010. Reproduced with publisher’s permission.
|
p. 113
| analysis of his hair suggests arsenic: “Napoleon poison theory revived,” CNN World , June 1, 2001, http://articles.cnn.com/2001-06-01/world/napoleon.poisoning_1_pascal-kintz-ben-weider-hair-samples?_s=PM:WORLD .
|
p. 114
| to remedy this public health problem: Allan H. Smith et al., “Contamination of Drinking-Water by Arsenic in Bangladesh: a Public Health Emergency,” Bulletin of the World Health Organization 78 (2000), 1093; A. Mushtaque and R. Chowdhury, “Arsenic Crisis in Bangladesh,” Scientific American (Aug. 2004), 86, 90.
|
p. 114
| “more than 10 million tubewells”: Ibid.
|
p. 115
| concentrations below 50 parts: This history is recounted in Cass R. Sunstein, “The Arithmetic of Arsenic,” Georgetown Law Journal 90 (2002), 2255.
|
p. 115
| one drop of arsenic in fifty drums: Charles Duhigg, “That Tap Water is Legal but may be Unhealthy,” New York Times , Dec. 17, 2009.
|
p. 115
| “but you didn’t vote for this”: As quoted in Sunstein, “The Arithmetic of Arsenic,” 2255.
|
p. 117
| “the groundwater can kill you”: Email from Alex Pfaff, Professor, Sanford Institute for Public Policy, Duke University, to author (Sept. 26, 2007).
|
p. 117
| the harm from microbial diseases: Ibid. Moreover, many of the traditional ponds used as water sources have since been polluted or converted into aquaculture.
|
p. 117
| “arsenic-contaminated tube-well water”: Ben Crow and Farhana Sultana, “Gender, Class, and Access to Water: Three Cases in a Poor and Crowded Delta,” Society and Natural Resources 15 (2002), 709, 718.
|
p. 117
| “Tubewells had fitted nicely”: Mushtaque and Chowdhury, “Arsenic Crisis in Bangladesh,” 90.
|
p. 118
| ten versus fifty seconds: Zane Satterfield, “What Does Ppm or Ppb Mean?,” National Environmental Services Center at West Virginia University, http://www.nesc.wvu.edu/ndwc/articles/ot/fa04/q&a.pdf .
|
p. 118
| additional capacity in the water treatment plant: Jason K. Burnett and Robert W. Hahn, “A Costly Benefit,” Regulation (Fall 2001), 44.
|
p. 118
| estimates ranging from six lives saved: Sunstein, “The Arithmetic of Arsenic,” 2258. “Today, the maximum contaminant level for arsenic is ten parts per billion, and more than fifty-six million Americans drink water that exceeds this level.” Royte, Bottlemania , 121.
|
p. 119
| “range below 50 parts per billion”: Sunstein, “The Arithmetic of Arsenic,” 2258.
|
p. 119
| bladder, colon, and rectal cancer: John D. Graham and Jonathan Baert Wiener, “Confronting Risk Tradeoffs,” in Risk Versus Risk: Tradeoffs in Protecting Health and the Environment , eds. John D. Graham and Jonathan Baert Wiener (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1995), 15; Morris, The Blue Death , 168–177.
|
p. 119
| younger versus older victims: Susan W. Putnam and Jonathan Baert Wiener, “Seeking Safe Drinking Water,” in Ibid . 124–125.
|
p. 119
| Interfere with the endocrine system: “Endocrine Disruptors/PPCPs,” American Water Works Association, http://www.awwa.org//Resources/topicspecific.cfm?ItemNumber=3647&navItemNumber=1580 ; “New Findings on the Timing of Sexual Maturity,” Our Stolen Future, http://www.ourstolenfuture.org//NewScience/reproduction/Puberty/puberty.htm .
|
p. 120
| behavior of certain wildlife: “IPCS Global Assessment of EDCs,” World Health Organization, http://www.who.int/ipcs/publications/en/ch1.pdf .
|
p. 120
| impact on human populations: J. H. Kim, “Removal of Endocrine Disruptors Using Homogeneous Metal Catalyst Combined with Nanofiltration Membrane,” Water Science and Technology 51 (2005), 381.
|
p. 120
| other persistent organic pollutants: Jerome Nriagu, “Pollutants and Health of Communities in the Great Lakes Basin,” http://www.miseagrant.umich.edu/downloads/research/papers/GLCOMM.pdf .
|
p. 120
| ten times higher than the level: “Endocrine Disruptors,” Birth Defect Research for Children, http://www.birthdefects.org//research/factsheets/fact%20EDCs.pdf .
|
p. 121
| widely used for controlling mosquitoes: Heidi J. Auman et al, “PCBS, DDE, DDT, and TCDD-EQ in Two Species of Island, Midway Atoll, North Pacific Ocean,” Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 16 (1997), 498.
|
p. 121
| so-called intersex fish: “Intersex Fish Found in Susquehanna River, Delmarva Lakes,” Chesapeake Bay Program, Nov. 17, 2010, http://www.chesapeakebay.net/news_intersexfish10.aspx?menuitem=54704 .
|
p. 121
| Florida’s Lake Apopka: “Endocrine Disruptors on the Gulf Coast,” Regional Perspectives in Environmental Science, http://www.mhhe.com/biosci/pae/environmentalscience/ca sestudies/case7.mhtml .
|
p. 121
| pharmaceuticals and personal care products: See, e.g., Julie Gerberding, “Pharmaceuticals and Personal Care Products (PPCPs) in Drinking Water,” DrinkTap.org , http://www.drinktap.org//consumerdnn/Home/WaterInformation/WaterQuality/PharmaceuticalsPPCPs/tabid/73/Default.aspx ; Abby C. Collier, “Pharmaceutical Contaminants in Pota Water: Potential Concerns for Pregnant Women and Children,” EcoHealth 4 (2007), 164, 170.
|
p. 121
| 80 percent of the streams: Jennifer Waters, “Water shortages,” CQ Researcher 20 (June 18, 2010), 529.
|
p. 121
| study of private wells: Glennon, Unquenchable , 71.
|
p. 121
| fifty-six pharmaceuticals or their by-products: Jeff Donn, Martha Mendoza, and Justin Pritchard, “Pharmaceuticals lurking in U.S. drinking water,” MSNBC.com., Mar. 10, 2008.
|
p. 122
| steroids and antibiotics near cattle feedlots: “Antibiotics Used for Growth in Food Animals Making their Way into Waterways,” Science Daily , Oct. 25, 2004.
|
p. 122
| New York, Houston, Chicago: Donn, Mendoza, and Pritchard, “Pharmaceuticals lurking in U.S. drinking water.”
|
p. 122
| “exposed to other people’s drugs”: Ibid.
|
p. 122
| “might pose a risk to water safety”: “Meeting report: pharmaceuticals in water,” Environmental Health Perspectives , July 2010, 1016.
|
p. 122
| pharmaceutical traces in drinking water: Jennifer Waters, “Water Shortages,” 529.
|
p. 122
| “emergent contaminants”: Glennon, Unquenchable , 168.
|
p. 123
| “the doses are so small”: Ibid.
|
p. 123
| twenty Olympic-size swimming pools: “Priest Point Park Sediment Study Shows Very Low Dioxin Levels,” Washington Department of Ecology, Mar. 24, 2011, http://www.ecy.wa.gov/news/2011/091.html .
|
p. 124
| synthetic compounds in the environment: Royte, Bottlemania , 127–129.
|
p. 124
| ultraviolet light, reverse osmosis: Glennon, Unquenchable , 169.
|
p. 125
| extend to private well water: Glennon, Ibid., 71.
|
p. 125
| not a single chemical: This section is drawn from a series of articles in the New York Times by Charles Duhigg, “That Tap Water is Legal but May be Unhealthy” New York Times , Dec. 16, 2009. The contaminants are listed at http://water.epa.gov/drink/contaminants/basicinformation/index.cfm .
|
p. 125
| violated key provisions: Charles Duhigg, “Millions in U.S. Drink Dirty Water, Records Show,” New York Times , Dec. 8, 2009.
|
p. 126
| “the level of enforcement activity”: Ibid.
|
p. 126
| “dumping poisons into streams”: Ibid.
|
p. 127
| bacteria, nitrates, and phosphates: Charles Duhigg, “Health Ills Abound as Farm Runoff Fouls,” New York Times , Sept. 17, 2009.
|
p. 127
| Fracking diagram. http://www.epa.gov/hfstudy/pdfs/overview-fact-sheet.pdf .
|
p. 128
| national gas from overseas: Marianne Lavelle, “Natural as stirs Hope and Fear in Pennsylvania,” National Geographic , Oct. 13, 2010.
|
p. 128
| fracking could satisfy the nation’s need: Abrahm Lust-garten, “Scientific Study Links Flammable Drinking Water to Fracking,” ProPublica, http://www.propublica.org/article/scientific-study-links-flammable-drinking-water-to-fracking .
|
p. 128
| Any ray of hope here: Ibid.
|
p. 129
| methane seepage in water wells: Letter to Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation, available at ProPublica, http://s3.amazonaws.com/propublica/assets/methane/pdep_nov_cabot_090227.pdf .
|
p. 129
| “lifted clear off the ground”: Abrahm Lustgarten, “Officials in Three States Pin Water Woes on Gas Drilling,” ProPublica, Apr. 26, 2009.
|
p. 129
| natural gas drilling boom: See http://www.gaslandthemovie.com/about-the-film .
|
p. 130
| distant drinking water sources: Bryan Walsh, “Another Fracking Mess for the Shale-Gas Industry,” Time , May 9, 2011.
|
p. 130
| had the CEO himself drunk the fluid: Catherine Tsai, “Halliburton Executive Drinks Fracking Fluid At Conference,” Huffington Post , Aug. 22, 2011, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/22/halliburton-executive-drinks-fracking-fluid_n_933621.html .
|
p. 130 - 1
| exempted fracking from coverage: Abrahm Lustgarten, “Natural Gas Drilling: What We Don’t Know,” ProPublica, http://www.propublica.org//article/natural-gas-drilling-what-we-dont-know-1231 .
|
p. 131
| the “Halliburton Loophole”: Editorial, “The Halliburton Loophole,” New York Times , Nov. 2, 2009, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/03/opinion/03tue3.html .
|
p. 131
| West Virginia has one inspector: Ibid.
|
p. 131
| a 1 in 3,333 chance: Morris, The Blue Death , 162.
|
p. 133
| anthropologist Eva-Marita Rinne: Rinne, “‘Seeing is Believing,’” 278.
|
p. 134
| more valuable than diamonds: See, e.g., Michael V. White, “Doctoring Adam Smith: The Fable of the Diamonds and Water Paradox,” History of Political Economy 34 (2002), 659.
|